GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge:
This case involves the constitutional and statutory rights of a federal employee punished for speaking. In recent years Congress and the courts have come a long way in expanding and fortifying those rights and in conferring on public employees citizenship of the first class. This decision is another episode in that journey.
Appellant Ella Porter was suspended without pay for thirty days from her clerk-typist job at the Southeastern Program Center of the Social Security Administration in Birmingham, Alabama. Porter was suspended primarily for writing and distributing a letter which, among other things, sharply criticized two of her superiors, appellees Listerman and Bruce. The suspension and appeal procedures in the Social Security Administration and the Civil Service Commission did not afford Porter an evidentiary hearing or discovery. After exhausting her administrative appeals, Porter sought review of the agency action in the federal district court by filing a complaint alleging the suspension violated her First and Fifth Amendment rights. 5 U.S.C. 706(2).1 Porter requested and then moved to compel discovery. The district court neither ruled nor commented on Porter’s discovery motion. Instead, the court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Porter appealed to this court the lower court’s grant of summary judgment.
Porter claims that her Fifth Amendment right to due process was violated because she was suspended without being allowed a full evidentiary hearing and that her First Amendment right of free speech was violated because she was punished for making protected speech. The district court held that the Fifth Amendment did not require a full hearing when a public employee was suspended for thirty days. Relying mainly on the “rudimentary hearing” doctrine in Goss v. Lopez, 419 U.S. 565, 95 S.Ct. 729, 42 L.Ed.2d 725 (1974), and distinguishing Arnett v. Kennedy, 446 U.S. 134, 94 S.Ct. 1633, 40 L.Ed.2d 15 (1974) and Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U.S. 254, 90 S.Ct. 1011, 25 L.Ed.2d 287 (1970) on the ground they involved more serious deprivations of property, the lower court found the more limited process specified in the controlling statute, 5 U.S.C. § 7501, and the administrative regulations, 5 C.F.R. § 752.301 et seq., and provided by the agency, to be constitutionally adequate [772]*772for the more limited deprivation of property at stake. On the First Amendment claim, the lower court upheld the suspension in a single conclusory paragraph. At somewhat greater length the court reviewed the suspension on the merits under an extremely deferential standard of review gleaned from the Administrative Procedures Act. Specifically, the court found there was “substantial evidence to support the adverse action against” Porter and that the “action was not arbitrary, capricious, or an abuse of discretion.” The court emphasized the limited nature of its review by adding: “This is the court’s opinion, although if this court were considering the evidence de novo it quite possibly would make a different decision from that made by the agency.”
We find that summary judgment on Porter’s First Amendment claim was not proper in this case given the existence of several genuine issues of material fact. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). Sartor v. Arkansas Gas Corp., 321 U.S. 620, 64 S.Ct. 724, 88 L.Ed. 967 (1944). Moreover, it is improper to rely heavily on the investigative findings and conclusions of an interested agency in a case such as this involving delicate and complex matters of an individual’s constitutional right against the government,2 especially where, as here, agency fact-finding procedures were inadequate. “The balancing here of First Amendment freedoms against an asserted governmental interest requires the judgment of the District Court. See A Quaker Action Group v. Morton, 148 U.S.App.D.C. 346, 352, 460 F.2d 854, 860 (1971).” Ring v. Schlesinger, 164 U.S.App.D.C. 19, 30, 502 F.2d 479, 490 (1974).
In almost identical circumstances the D.C. Circuit Court in Ring v. Schlesinger, supra, held improper the district court’s grant of the government’s summary judgment motion.
In addition, we find that in this case Porter has a statutory right to a full evidentiary hearing in district court under 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(F). Section 706(2)(F) authorizes the court to conduct a de novo review of agency findings and conclusions which are based on inadequate fact-finding by the agency.
For these reasons, we remand this case to the district court for a full hearing. The hearing which the district court will give Porter, however, clearly satisfies the requirements of the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment. Therefore we reject Porter’s claim that the agency cannot suspend her unless it also gives her a full evidentiary hearing. We need not reach the constitutional question of whether a suspended government employee is entitled to a hearing under the 5th Amendment, as held in Keane v. Berry, 416 F.Supp. 858 (D.Ariz.1976) because we find that given the circumstances of this case Porter is entitled to a judicial hearing.
Finally, we also rule that the agency acted arbitrarily and capriciously in suspending Porter in part for her cautious behavior during interviews with the official she had accused of corruption.
I.
A. Our first question is whether the lower court erred in granting the Government’s motion for summary judgment.
Summary judgment is authorized only if “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and . . . the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). Sartor v. Arkansas Gas Corp., 321 U.S. 620, 64 S.Ct. 724, 88 L.Ed. 967 (1944). The function of the court on a summary judgment motion “is limited to ascertaining whether any factual issue pertinent to the controversy exists; it does not extend to resolution of any such issue.” Nyhus v. Travel Management Corporation, 151 U.S.App.D.C. 269, 271, 466 F.2d 440, 442 (1972). On the appeal here from summary judgment for the Government, this court as the reviewing tribunal must give to appellant as the party against whom summary judgment was entered the most favorable view of the record. Libby v. L. J. Corporation, 101 U.S.App.D.C. 87, 247 F.2d 78 (1957).
[773]*773We look to the Supreme Court case of Pickering v. Board of Education, 391 U.S. 563, 88 S.Ct. 1731, 20 L.Ed.2d 811 (1968), and its progeny for the test in determining whether Porter was properly disciplined for her speech. In Pickering the Supreme Court said the First Amendment requires a balancing test between the interest of the employee in commenting on matters of public concern and the interest of the Government, as an employer, in promoting the efficiency of the public services it performs through its employees. Id. 88 S.Ct. at 1735. In applying this test, the Court articulated several of the factors which might be considered. Significantly, the Court noted it is relevant whether the employee’s speech raised a “question of maintaining either discipline by immediate superiors or harmony among coworkers,” id., or interfered with the regular operation of the office generally. Id. at 1737. The Court also asked whether the employee who criticized his superiors had “the kind of close working relationships [with supervisors he criticized] for which it can persuasively be claimed that personal loyalty and confidence are necessary to their proper functioning.” Id. at 1735.3 And the Court asked whether the speech impeded the employee’s proper performance of his daily duties. Id. at 1737. The Fifth Circuit clarified this question in Smith v. United States, 502 F.2d 512, 517 (5th Cir. 1974), holding that:
In order for the government to constitutionally remove an employee from government service for exercising the right of free speech, it is incumbent upon it to clearly demonstrate that the employee’s conduct substantially and materially interferes with the discharge of duties and responsibilities inherent in such employment. Battle v. Mulholland, 439 F.2d 321 (5th Cir. 1971).
502 F.2d at 517.
On the other side of the balance a court must consider the values of First Amendment protection. Here the Court in Pickering emphasized “[t]he public interest in having free and unhindered debate on matters of public importance.” Pickering, supra, 88 S.Ct. at 1737. More specifically the Court added “that statements by public officials on matters of public concern must be accorded First Amendment protection despite the fact that the statements are directed at their nominal superiors.” Id. To these factors listed in Pickering, we would add one other. Since the First Amendment also concerns the right and need of the society’s citizens to receive information helpful to their economic, social, and political activities, Virginia State Board of Pharmacy v. Virginia Citizens Consumers Council, Inc., 425 U.S. 748, 96 S.Ct. 1817, 1823, 1826-27, 48 L.Ed.2d 346 (1976), we note it is relevant whether citizens have access to the information contained in the employee’s speech through avenues less disruptive of government purposes and efficiency.4 Unless this balance favors the government, the government should not be permitted to punish an employee for truthful speech, or for false speech made without malice or reckless disregard of the truth. Pickering, supra, 88 S.Ct. at 1738.
Before concluding our general discussion of the First Amendment balancing test, one final word is in order. The First Amendment balancing test can hardly be controlled by a finding that disruption did occur. An employee who accurately exposes rampant corruption in her office no doubt may disrupt and demoralize much of the office. But it would be absurd to hold [774]*774that the First Amendment generally authorizes corrupt officials to punish subordinates who blow the whistle simply because the speech somewhat disrupted the office. Of course, as Pickering indicates, the chilling of even accurate speech may be justified in certain extreme situations, for example, in which the employee unduly breached confidentiality or disrupted intimate working relationships. The point is simply that the balancing test articulated in Pickering is truly a balancing test, with office disruption or breached confidences being only weights on the scales.
We now consider the facts of the instant case, viewed most favorably for the appellant, in terms of this First Amendment balancing test. We note at the outset that the lower court based its decision on an administrative record we find inadequate5 and on a few brief affidavits of the parties containing conflicting evidence and assertions. Two conflicts are critical. First, we find a genuine issue as to whether Porter’s allegations of corruption are true or false. Second, we find a genuine issue as to whether, and to what extent, her speech “substantially and materially” interfered with the discharge of her duties, with the maintenance of discipline by superiors or harmony among coworkers, or with the operation of the office generally.
To elaborate on our ruling that these genuine issues exist, we must first provide additional factual background.
Appellant Porter was suspended on June 5, 1975 for 30 days on the following two charges:
“1. Writing letters to employees communicating false information which injured the reputation of management officials, lowered employee confidence in the integrity of the organization and adversely affected the efficiency of the office.
“2. Failure to cooperate with management.”
Porter defended herself against these charges mainly by asserting her First Amendment right to speak and by denying certain factual assertions implicit in the charges.
The center of the case against Porter and of the first charge in particular is the material she distributed to her fellow employees in 1975. Porter distributed three things in the one mailing she made. First is a letter,6 [775]*775dated February 20, 1975, and signed by Porter appealing for “financial and moral support” for Don Jolly, a former President of the American Federation of Government Employees local in the Program Center and a former coworker of Porter’s. Jolly had been fired a few months before Porter distributed her letter and, according to Porter, needed funds for the legal expenses in his appeal of his termination. Before being fired Jolly had made certain charges of conflict of interest against Listerman and Bruce, and in her letter Porter alleged appellees had had Jolly fired because of these criticisms. In addition, the letter again asserted that Listerman and Bruce were corrupt. The basis of this assertion is Lister-man’s and Bruce’s role in AMWAY. AMWAY is a private corporation which apparently sells women’s clothes and make-up and which Bruce, Listerman and other Southeastern Program Center employees work or worked for part-time. Porter accused Bruce and Listerman of using government time for AM WAY work and, more significantly, influencing their subordinates in the Program Center to join the AMWAY operation by favoring AMWAY members when making government promotion decisions.
Similar criticisms of the AM WAY connection with the office were made to Lister-man by Don Jolly in 1971, when he was president of the local of the American Federation of Government Employees.7 Jolly was fired in 1974, and was in the process of appealing his termination with the Civil Service Commission at the time of Porter’s suspension.8 In her letter Porter also alleged that Listerman had had Jolly fired because of his criticisms of AMWAY.
The second part of the three-part packet distributed by Porter is a copy of a confidential memo dated May 21, 1970 written by Bruce. The memo, entitled “Possible conflict of interest,” refers to AMWAY discussions among Program Center employees. The memo, addressed to 13 Program Center employees, cautions against spending too much office time discussing AMWAY because it will invite criticism from “those who will be quick to look for any impropriety in your activities (all our activities).” However, the memo also encourages some discussion of AMWAY during the “brief conversations and discussions” that “each person spends . . throughout each day” on “non-business matters in which [776]*776they are interested, i. e., sports, weather, rumors, etc.” “Since our interests lie in a much more intriguing and profitable area,” the memo states, “it is to be expected that when we meet, the topic of our conversation will often be ‘our favorite subject.’ ” The memo concludes by telling the addressees to treat the memo confidential “since persons who are not distributors would not understand” it.
The third part of Porter’s distributed material is a chart showing various Program Center employees and their positions in relation to the “Listerman and Bruce AMWAY Organization, circa 1970-1972.” The message implied in the chart is that government employees who joined AMWAY fared better in their Social Security careers under Listerman and Bruce than those who did not join AMWAY.
In determining whether Porter spoke falsely or with malice or recklessness, the lower court must consider all of the evidence, including the following. To begin with, we note that Porter, accused of recklessly disregarding the truth, in fact attached to her letter, and quoted in its entirety, a long memo written by her adversary. Second, the Record shows that Jolly, the former president of the union local, shared Porter’s views and was, at the time of Porter’s suspension, appealing his own termination apparently on the ground that he had been fired for making the same allegations as Porter. Moreover, several management officials indicated in the record that Porter and Jolly were not alone in their suspicions when Porter made her charges. Bruce spoke of employees “who were, or might be expected to be, sympathetic to Mr. Jolly’s cause” even before Porter mailed her material. Another official, named Keller, referred to “persons in the ‘Jolly group.’ ” And Cannon, the official who made the initial decision in the suspension procedure, said that the Porter material had been described to him initially by “some long-time employees” as “ ‘the same old slaps’ at the Regional Representative.” Thus, rather than the reckless lies of a single disruptive employee, Porter’s charges might be an expression of the festering concerns of a considerable number of employees.
At several points in the administrative record9 it is implied that since Porter read the file in the Jolly case before speaking about it, if she spoke about it inaccurately, then she spoke with malice or recklessness. However, the best evidence in the record presented by the government for this assertion could be read as supporting Porter, and even the truth of her statements, instead of the government.10 Moreover, the record in [777]*777the instant case does not contain the record in the Jolly case, or even an adequate description of it by someone other than Porter. Thus, it would be impossible for a court to decide from this record whether Porter’s statements about the Jolly case were true or false. And of course Jolly was still appealing his case at the time Porter made her mailing, and our record does not report the final disposition of his appeal. Normally, one would not consider it malicious or in reckless disregard of the truth to assert simply that the claims of an appellant in ongoing litigation are meritorious.
Moreover, in an interview with Robert Flynn, a government official from the social security office in Baltimore who investigated Porter’s suspension on her appeal to that office, Porter said she “could produce witnesses to testify that they had recently been solicited, on the premises, by persons on the ‘chart’, to join the AMWAY organization or buy its products, that notices were placed in the building giving the name and location of a person offering AMWAY products for sale, etc.” Porter was not afforded a judicial or administrative hearing or subpoena powers, and these witnesses have not testified. Especially considering the fact that appellees did not produce specific evidence discrediting Porter’s allegations, we feel it was improper for the district court to foreclose Porter’s opportunity to present these witnesses and this evidence by granting summary judgment. In short, we find a genuine issue of fact as to the truthfulness of the statements Porter made in her letter concerning the operation of AMWAY in her office.
As for the truth of the memo attributed to Bruce, the government makes no claim that Bruce did not write and distribute it, or that Porter did not reproduce it accurately and in its entirety.
As for the accuracy of the “AMWAY Organization Chart,” the record contains conflicting evidence. In his affidavit Jolly states that Bruce “identified the Lister-man — Bruce AM WAY Organization Chart as being a reasonable and accurate depiction of the AMWAY organization” at Jolly’s arbitration hearing in July of 1974. However, Flynn disputed this version of Bruce’s testimony when he interviewed Porter, commenting to her that “when testifying about the AMWAY organization, Mr. Bruce had specifically stated [the chart] was not an accurate representation of the organization.” (emphasis added) Unfortunately that testimony of Bruce’s is not itself in the record, and Bruce is silent on this question in his affidavit and his interview with Flynn. Without further discussing this apparent conflict of evidence and incomplete record, we do note that most of the names listed by Porter on the AMWAY chart also had been listed by Bruce himself as addressees on his confidential AMWAY memo. In any case, the factual dispute is not properly settled at the summary judgment stage.
The second genuine dispute warranting a fuller hearing of the facts is the extent to which Porter’s speech disrupted the office.11 [778]*778This record contains no evidence as to whether there was a measurable decline in the efficiency of Program Center operations and whether that injury was caused by Porter. In fact the main evidence placed by the government in the record even indirectly on this critical factual dispute is the selectively reported, largely anonymous and generally inconclusive third-hand hearsay contained in a memo written by Bruce, an obviously biased source.12 Considering how may objective measures and more impartial witnesses were available, the Government’s exclusive use of this kind of vague and biased evidence is especially suspect.
Moreover, Bruce’s subjective characterization and selectively-reported third-hand hearsay account of anonymous employee reaction is equally compatible with mild and legitimate employee concern caused by the firing of a union leader who had accused management of abusing the promotion system. Furthermore, it is possible that the real source of the concern among employees was the secret AMWAY operation, and not Porter, merely the bearer of the bad news. Jolly asserts this in his affidavit. See note 7 supra. Thus there is a clear conflict of evidence on this factual question, again making summary judgment improper.
As a general rule a court should use Rule 56 summary judgment most sparingly in a First Amendment case such as this involving delicate constitutional rights, complex fact situations, disputed testimony, and questionable credibilities. This is especially true where the only affidavits supporting the motion for summary judgment come from officials who are attempting to silence a subordinate who has accused them of corruption, where those affidavits are vague and conclusory, and where the administrative record largely shaped by the officials themselves contains clearly conflicting evidence. Courts must not allow Rule 56 and the interests of judicial economy to become a rubber stamp obscuring rights indelibly printed in the constitution.
The district court on remand must determine, among other things,13 to what extent Porter’s allegations were false, to what extent they were malicious or reckless, and to what extent they “substantially and materially” adversely affected the government. See Ring v. Schlesinger, supra.
[779]*779In addition, after determining the facts to its own satisfaction, the district court will have to conduct the balancing test prescribed in Pickering, supra. To guide it in this endeavor, we make the following comments. The First Amendment generally favors the marketplace testing of ideas and information rather than their arbitrary control by the government. As it is, the government itself, and especially its top officials, speak loudly in our society. Such volume is tolerable in part because the government does not speak in one voice. The First Amendment ensures that under most circumstances even the most junior government clerk typist can criticize the speech and acts of the top officials in her office as freely as any citizen can. Citing Pickering, the government in this case might reasonably respond that permitting and then refuting each and every charge its employees make will be inefficient and will drain agency resources. We have no doubt that the marketplace of ideas often entails such costs, but the Supreme Court has made clear that the First Amendment generally eschews this short-sighted view and is more concerned with the long-term gains of robust debate. To a point, and in certain circumstances, the First Amendment tolerates the chilling and punishing of employee speech. But it is not far beyond that point, and in only slightly varied circumstances, that we risk the strangulation of the free marketplace of ideas by the monopolism of official control. The First Amendment protects the ventilation of even the most noxious idea unless and until the government proves that the speech is so poisonous to government operations that, on balance, it is necessary to choke off the pungent exhalations of the sincere whistle-blower and suffer in the sadly thinner atmosphere that is left. Thus Pickering states that the First Amendment requires the government not just to show that certain employee speech injures the government, but to show that the benefits of preventing the injury actually outweigh the profound benefits of free speech in this society. In conducting the balancing test, and in considering the legitimacy of management’s decision to punish and chill employee speech in this case as opposed to tolerating and rebutting it, the lower court will have to consider all relevant facts and arguments, including the following:
Porter’s charges involved two ongoing matters — the dispute over the termination of the top union leader of her office and the allegedly corrupt and continuing AMWAY operation. If true, her charges would be matters of current and legitimate employee and public concern, as well as matters in which management might be expected to have conflicting interests in regulating. Moreover, Porter’s charges involved information which might not have been generally or otherwise available to many listeners.
Management itself said that Porter’s charges were such that “employees who were familiar with the Jolly case . could make a judgment as to the accuracy of the material.” In his interview with Flynn, the Social Security investigator from Baltimore, Appellee Bruce reportedly stated the following:
In February, Ms. Porter’s letter and its attachment began being issued to program center employees. At first, distribution was apparently limited to those who were, or might be expected to be, sympathetic to Mr. Jolly’s cause. Despite the misstatements of fact in the material, management felt no urgent need for action as long as distribution was limited to this group, or indeed, to program center employees who were familiar with the Jolly case and, consequently, could make a judgment as to the accuracy of the material. Subsequently, however, additional mailings were made, and the material began to reach new employees and members of the supervisory staff.
But of course one logical conclusion of this reasonable policy, and a conclusion more in keeping with the marketplace of ideas principle at the heart of the First Amendment, might be that management could have familiarized its employees, including new and supervisory, with the management’s view of the facts of the controversy.
[780]*780Since the agency decision to suspend and thus silence Porter was made after she had spoken fully, and since there was no claim that Porter intended a second mailing or further disclosures, the suspension did not meaningfully reduce Porter’s allegedly “disruptive” influence in the Program Center. At best, it had a chilling effect on hypothetical speech in the future, presumably mainly disruptive speech by other employees on other matters.
Aside from the vague claim that Porter’s speech hurt agency efficiency, appellees have made no claim that Porter was not performing her government job adequately.14 Thus, by suspending Porter instead of neutralizing or balancing her speech with rebuttal management speech, management has deprived the government of 30 days work of one of its otherwise competent and productive employees.
Finally, we also note the connection between Porter’s speech and Jolly’s litigation of his own constitutional rights. With a few exceptions, the American legal system makes private parties pay their own legal fees. And yet meaningful access to our legal system is a fundamental right of citizenship in this country. Especially where the government is one of the parties in the related litigation, courts must most carefully scrutinize government action which attempts to chill private speech designed to raise funds for the legal fees of the private party litigating, and especially defending himself, against the government. See generally United Transportation Union v. State Bar of Michigan, 401 U.S. 576, 91 S.Ct. 1076, 28 L.Ed.2d 339 (1971), United Mine Workers v. Illinois State Bar Ass’n, 389 U.S. 217, 88 S.Ct. 353, 19 L.Ed.2d 426 (1967), Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v. Virginia ex rel. Virginia State Bar, 377 U.S. 1, 84 S.Ct. 1113, 12 L.Ed.2d 89 (1964), and NAACP v. Button, 371 U.S. 415, 83 S.Ct. 328, 9 L.Ed.2d 405 (1963).
B. In setting aside the lower court’s cursory rejection of Porter’s constitutional claim, we note the possibility that the court may have relied on agency findings or deferred to agency rulings in making its decision. This too would be error. The intent of Congress in 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(B) was that courts should make an independent assessment of a citizen’s claim of constitutional right when reviewing agency decision-making. Whereas § 706(2) authorizes reviewing courts to overturn agency findings and actions involving non-constitutional claims only when the agency has abused its discretion, § 706(2)(A), acted arbitrarily and capriciously, § 706(2)(A), or made findings unsupported by substantial evidence, § 706(2)(E), section 706(2)(B) explicitly authorizes the court to set aside any agency action “contrary to constitutional right . . . .”15
Thus, in A Quaker Action Group v. Hickel, 137 U.S.App.D.C. 176, 183, 421 F.2d 1111, 1118 (1969), the Court noted that even in an area as sensitive as the judgments of the Secret Service in protecting the President, a court must make an independent assessment of a First Amendment claim. The Court said:
The expertise of those entrusted with the protection of the President does not qualify them to resolve First Amendment issues, the traditional province of the judiciary. A balancing of First Amendment freedoms against the requirements of Presidential safety may be left to other agencies in the first instance. But absent a compelling showing — which has not been begun here — that courts cannot evaluate the questions of fact involved in estimating danger to the President, the final judgment must rest with the courts. [781]*781To enable the court to reach a reasoned conclusion, it is incumbent upon any party who would invoke Presidential safety as a paramount consideration to provide the court with the information necessary to an even-handed decision.
Id. 137 U.S.App.D.C. at 183, 421 F.2d at 1118.16
Our literal reading of § 706(2)(B) is consistent with general principles of constitutional adjudication. As the Supreme Court noted in Pickering, supra 88 S.Ct. at 1740 n.2, “[t]his Court has regularly held' that where constitutional rights are in issue an independent examination of the record will be made in order that the controlling legal principles may be applied to the actual facts of the case. E. g., Norris v. Alabama, 294 U.S. 587, 55 S.Ct. 579, [79 L.Ed. 1074] (1935), Pennekamp v. Florida, 328 U.S. 331, 66 S.Ct. 1029, 90 L.Ed. 1295 (1946), and New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 285, 84 S.Ct. 710, 728, 11 L.Ed.2d 686 (1964).”17
Moreover, Porter would of course have a right to sue directly under the constitution to enjoin her supervisors and other federal officials from violating her constitutional rights. See, e. g., Arnett v. Kennedy, 416 U.S. 134, 94 S.Ct. 1633, 40 L.Ed.2d 15 (1974). In that case there would be no statutory reason for the court to defer to agency findings or rulings. Whether Porter sues directly under the constitution to enjoin agency action, or instead asks a federal court to “set aside” the agency actions as “contrary to [her] constitutional right[s]” under § 706(2)(B), the role of the district court is the same.
To summarize, it is not clear from the lower court’s opinion in the instant case whether the court wrongly deferred to the agency determination of Porter’s constitutional rights, or simply ruled independently but wrongly against Porter by granting the government’s summary judgment motion when genuine issues of fact remained. In either case, though, the court erred and we must remand the case to it for a full hear[782]*782ing and independent judgment on Porter’s constitutional claim.
II.
In addition, we find that Porter is entitled to a de novo review in the district court of all her claims against the agency under § 706(2)(F). Under § 706(2)(F) facts are “subject to trial de novo by the reviewing court” when “the [agency] action is adjudicatory in nature and the agency fact-finding procedures are inadequate.” Citizens to Preserve Overton Park v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402, 91 S.Ct. 814, 828, 28 L.Ed.2d 136 (1971).
Obviously this case involves administrative action of an adjudicatory nature. We think it is equally clear that the agency’s fact-finding procedures were inadequate in this particular case. The chief inadequacy in the agency fact-finding procedures used in this case was the pervasive role played by Listerman and Bruce, the officials Porter explicitly accused of corruption. Bruce conducted the initial fact-finding interviews with Porter about her accusations. After the meetings, Bruce initiated the disciplinary process by recommending to his superior that Porter be punished. That official relayed the recommendation to Listerman, who turned the matter over to his subordinates “for review and any action deemed appropriate.” 18 The subordinate who conducted this investigation and review, James Cannon, conducted one interview — he met with Bruce “to go over the background.”19 Bruce used the occasion to impress upon Cannon, who was inferior to Bruce in the bureaucracy, that the Porter matter was “a serious one, requiring serious consideration and a serious disciplinary action, if adverse action were to be taken.” In assessing the impact of Porter’s material on the efficiency of the office, Cannon apparently relied entirely on a one-page memo written by Bruce.20 Cannon conducted no investigation of his own into this question or any other question in the controversy. He never interviewed Porter. For her position he relied entirely on her statements to Bruce in their two meetings, and on the material she distributed. Moreover it does not appear that Cannon ever asked a single question of anyone about the AM WAY operation.
Cannon recommended to his superior, Hunter Keller, that Porter should be suspended. Porter was then informed of this recommendation and the reasons for it and permitted to write a letter in response. Keller, after reading Porter’s letter and the file collected by Cannon, decided to suspend Porter for 30 days.
Upon Porter’s appeal of her suspension, the central headquarters of the agency in Baltimore dispatched an investigator named Robert Flynn to Birmingham to conduct interviews in the Program Center. Flynn interviewed seven persons in total over a three day period. Flynn interviewed Bruce and Listerman, but did not ask them about AMWAY. Flynn interviewed Porter only once, and only after he had completed all his other interviews. He did not reinterview the persons Porter felt she could impeach. Thus, Porter was denied an opportunity to confront her accusers even in the most rudimentary sense of having Flynn ask her questions for her. Flynn did not interview Jolly or anyone else sympathetic to Porter’s position, in spite of the fact that Porter told him she knew of fellow employees who could corroborate parts of her story. The research conducted by the Baltimore office did not entail an adequate inquiry into the central issues in the case — i. e. the truth of Porter’s statements, the alleged disruptive impact of these statements on the Program Center, and the fairness of the prior investigation of Porter. In addition, to the extent questions about these matters were asked, they were asked, without benefit of cross-examination, only of persons accused of wrong-doing by Por[783]*783ter, and thus obviously biased, or of persons who conducted the initial investigation, which, as we noted, was heavily influenced by Bruce and Listerman.21
Either of these inadequacies by itself — an initial investigation overly influenced by biased superiors and a superficial review investigation — might not render agency fact-finding procedures inadequate under § 706(2)(F).22 Rather, we find the process inadequate in the instant case because the biased or otherwise inadequate initial fact-finding process was not cured by a subsequent impartial and full review in the agency-
In similar circumstances, although not under the dictates of § 706(2)(F), the Supreme Court in Pickering, supra, 88 S.Ct. at 1740 n.2, noted the stricter standard of review generally applicable to the fact-findings and conclusions of a less than impartial tribunal.23
The Court stated,
we do not propose to blind ourselves to the obvious defects in the fact-finding process occasioned by the board’s multiple functioning vis-a-vis appellant. Compare Turney v. State of Ohio, 273 U.S. 510, 47 S.Ct. 437, 71 L.Ed. 749 (1927); In re Murchison, 349 U.S. 133, 75 S.Ct. 623, 99 L.Ed. 942 (1955). Accordingly, since the state courts have at no time given de novo consideration to the statements in the letter, we feel free to examine the evidence in this case completely independently and to afford little weight to the factual determinations made by the Board.
But a more fundamental inadequacy lies at the heart of the agency procedures used in this case. Given the circumstances of this case, we would be hard-pressed to imagine adequate fact-finding procedures which did not include an opportunity for Porter to discover evidence, and to subpoena and to cross-examine witnesses — in short, a full evidentiary hearing. Porter claimed that leading officials in her office were corrupt and had punished employees who opposed them. Without subpoena power, Porter’s only hope is that a few of her fellow employees, knowing of Porter’s own suspension and Jolly’s recent termination, will courageously come forward and support her story by speaking either with the management accused of corruption and vindictiveness or with a single, anonymous official who passes through the office unannounced on a brief visit. Such risk-taking is courageous, but not an especially reliable fact-finding procedure in heated constitutional controversies. Moreover, since matters of good faith and credibility are at the center of this case, the lack of opportunity for discovery and cross-examination are especially damaging to the pursuit of truth.24
The government’s interest in not providing a hearing in this case is minimal. Since a hearing could be held during or after the suspension, and since the government is allowing the eventual return of the employee in any case, the holding of a hearing does [784]*784not force the government to tolerate the presence of the employee and her alleged disruptive influence any more than if no hearing were held. Moreover, a hearing would not likely be more fiscally or administratively burdensome than the existing procedure. The reviewing investigator in this ease traveled from Baltimore to Birmingham at considerable expense to the government and conducted three days of interviews. We doubt that even a full evidentiary hearing in this case would last more than three days or cost the government much more than this visit. See Keane v. Berry, 416 F.Supp. 858, 860-61 (D.Ariz.1976).
In conclusion, considering the shortcomings of the agency fact-finding procedures used in this case, we find that, under 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(F), as interpreted by the Supreme Court in Overton Park, the agency fact-finding procedures used in this case were inadequate. Therefore, under § 706(2)(F), the district court should hold a de novo hearing in reviewing Porter’s 30-day suspension.
III.
One final matter must be resolved. There is no need to remand for further litigation the government’s claim that Porter can be suspended for “failure to cooperate with management.” This charge is groundless. To the extent Porter’s suspension was based on this charge, the suspension was arbitrary and capricious and is hereby set-aside. 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A).25
This charge against Porter was based solely on the behavior of Porter, her lawyer, and her “personal representative” in two meetings with Bruce.26 As we noted earlier, these meetings were presumptively improper because they permitted the man accused of corruption by Porter to be the initial and chief investigator of her charges. But once she was forced to participate in the meetings — upon being threatened with an insubordination charge by Bruce — she had a right to protect her own interests in a reasonable way in what was obviously an adversary context. Certainly her caution, her reluctance to retract her prior statements or to make additional self-incriminating statements to her chief adversary, can hardly by itself justify a “non-cooperation” charge and punishment. Such use of this charge could lead to obvious abuses and intimidations of dissenters, whistle-blowers, or just independent thinkers. Such a charge might also be abused by managers who suspect certain substantive offenses but are not able to prove them. Though Bruce represented the two meetings as simple “information seeking” sessions, they seemed more like preliminary stages in Brucéis campaign either to intimidate Porter into retracting her statements about him or to begin collecting self-incriminating statements for later use in an impending adverse action against Porter.27
Immediately after the second meeting Bruce proposed that Porter be suspended, and she was soon after. The accounts of the two meetings, and a memo written by Bruce, comprised the bulk of the investigatory file used against her.
Moreover, it is not even clear what additional cooperation or information manage[785]*785ment expected from Porter. During the meeting she frankly confirmed she wrote the letter (after all, she had signed it and had never denied writing it) and repeated that she believed her statements were true. As is obvious from the circumstances, certainly Bruce knew as much or more than Porter about the AMWAY operation, about his own secret memo, and even about Jolly’s dismissal (e. g., during the meeting Bruce said, “[W]e know precisely why [Jolly] was terminated.”).
Also, it is hardly the ease that Porter was the prime or sole source of “evasion” during the meeting. When Bruce asked Porter if she was the author of the letter, signed by her, she said yes. When Porter asked Bruce if he was the author of the memo signed by him, he answered:
I don’t intend to let this interview be turned around to be an interview of management in this respect. We are here to find out what the basis of this letter from Mrs. Porter’s knowledge, (sic)
Bruce made this statement in spite of the fact that he began the meeting by saying:
Furthermore, during the course of the interview, we may find it necessary to provide Mrs. Porter and her representatives with information we might have that you might not have available to you.
But when Porter’s lawyer asked for this information, Bruce replied: “We have no reason to believe that she does not have all the information that we intend to present to her.”
We conclude that it is unthinkable that a public employee who attempts to expose corruption in her office should be punished for not “cooperating fully” in an interview with the officials she has accused. In her February letter Porter accused Bruce of corrupt practices and of “covering his tracks.” Bruce then uses his government authority to order Porter, with one day’s notice, to come in and reveal the evidence she has for her allegations against him. We can hardly imagine convicting a man of obstructing justice if, when he complains of police brutality, the department sends the policeman accused of the brutality to investigate and the victim insists on speaking through the key hole.
Such a flagrant conflict of interest in an investigator may or may not by itself constitute a violation of due process,28 but it clearly can not fairly form the basis of a charge that the employee is improperly and actionably not cooperating with management.
IV.
Suspension of Porter from her job, and other penalties and privations resulting therefrom,29 may be the only material issue before the Court, but what we hold here may and should impart an important dignity to the First Amendment expressions of those who are federal employees, which employees, if not exactly equal, at least approach parity with the freedom from government regulation of those who work and speak elsewhere.
In summary, we affirm the lower court’s denial of Porter’s due process claim, but only on the ground that the provision of a full de novo judicial review hearing in federal court satisfies Porter’s 5th Amendment right to due process in this case.
We remand to the district court, for discovery 30 and a full evidentiary trial on Porter’s First Amendment claim and the agency’s decision to suspend Porter for
“Writing letters to employees communicating false information which injured the reputation of management officials, lowered employee confidence in the integ[786]*786rity of the organization and adversely affected the efficiency of the office.”
And we hold that Porter’s suspension was arbitrary and capricious to the extent it was based on the charge concerning Porter’s alleged “failure to cooperate with management.”
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded in part.